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187 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
187 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Contributing
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parent: Development
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nav_order: 1
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permalink: /development/contributing
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---
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{% include deprecation.html %}
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# Contributing to Dendrite
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Everyone is welcome to contribute to Dendrite! We aim to make it as easy as
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possible to get started.
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## Contribution types
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We are a small team maintaining a large project. As a result, we cannot merge every feature, even if it
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is bug-free and useful, because we then commit to maintaining it indefinitely. We will always accept:
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- bug fixes
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- security fixes (please responsibly disclose via security@matrix.org *before* creating pull requests)
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We will accept the following with caveats:
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- documentation fixes, provided they do not add additional instructions which can end up going out-of-date,
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e.g example configs, shell commands.
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- performance fixes, provided they do not add significantly more maintenance burden.
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- additional functionality on existing features, provided the functionality is small and maintainable.
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- additional functionality that, in its absence, would impact the ecosystem e.g spam and abuse mitigations
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- test-only changes, provided they help improve coverage or test tricky code.
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The following items are at risk of not being accepted:
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- Configuration or CLI changes, particularly ones which increase the overall configuration surface.
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The following items are unlikely to be accepted into a main Dendrite release for now:
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- New MSC implementations.
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- New features which are not in the specification.
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## Sign off
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We require that everyone who contributes to the project signs off their contributions
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in accordance with the [Developer Certificate of Origin](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.rst#sign-off).
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In effect, this means adding a statement to your pull requests or commit messages
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along the lines of:
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```
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Signed-off-by: Full Name <email address>
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```
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Unfortunately we can't accept contributions without a sign-off.
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Please note that we can only accept contributions under a legally identifiable name,
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such as your name as it appears on government-issued documentation or common-law names
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(claimed by legitimate usage or repute). We cannot accept sign-offs from a pseudonym or
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alias and cannot accept anonymous contributions.
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If you would prefer to sign off privately instead (so as to not reveal your full
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name on a public pull request), you can do so by emailing a sign-off declaration
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and a link to your pull request directly to the [Matrix.org Foundation](https://matrix.org/foundation/)
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at `dco@matrix.org`. Once a private sign-off has been made, you will not be required
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to do so for future contributions.
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## Getting up and running
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See the [Installation](../installation) section for information on how to build an
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instance of Dendrite. You will likely need this in order to test your changes.
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## Code style
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On the whole, the format as prescribed by `gofmt`, `goimports` etc. is exactly
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what we use and expect. Please make sure that you run one of these formatters before
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submitting your contribution.
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## Comments
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Please make sure that the comments adequately explain *why* your code does what it
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does. If there are statements that are not obvious, please comment what they do.
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We also have some special tags which we use for searchability. These are:
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* `// TODO:` for places where a future review, rewrite or refactor is likely required;
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* `// FIXME:` for places where we know there is an outstanding bug that needs a fix;
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* `// NOTSPEC:` for places where the behaviour specifically does not match what the
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[Matrix Specification](https://spec.matrix.org/) prescribes, along with a description
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of *why* that is the case.
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## Linting
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We use [golangci-lint](https://github.com/golangci/golangci-lint) to lint Dendrite
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which can be executed via:
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```bash
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golangci-lint run
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```
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If you are receiving linter warnings that you are certain are spurious and want to
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silence them, you can annotate the relevant lines or methods with a `// nolint:`
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comment. Please avoid doing this if you can.
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## Unit tests
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We also have unit tests which we run via:
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```bash
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DENDRITE_TEST_SKIP_NODB=1 go test --race ./...
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```
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This only runs SQLite database tests. If you wish to execute Postgres tests as well, you'll either need to
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have Postgres installed locally (`createdb` will be used) or have a remote/containerized Postgres instance
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available.
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To configure the connection to a remote Postgres, you can use the following enviroment variables:
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```bash
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POSTGRES_USER=postgres
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POSTGRES_PASSWORD=yourPostgresPassword
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POSTGRES_HOST=localhost
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POSTGRES_DB=postgres # the superuser database to use
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```
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In general, we like submissions that come with tests. Anything that proves that the
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code is functioning as intended is great, and to ensure that we will find out quickly
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in the future if any regressions happen.
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We use the standard [Go testing package](https://gobyexample.com/testing) for this,
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alongside some helper functions in our own [`test` package](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/test).
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## Continuous integration
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When a Pull Request is submitted, continuous integration jobs are run automatically
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by GitHub actions to ensure that the code builds and works in a number of configurations,
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such as different Go versions, using full HTTP APIs and both database engines.
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CI will automatically run the unit tests (as above) as well as both of our integration
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test suites ([Complement](https://github.com/matrix-org/complement) and
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[SyTest](https://github.com/matrix-org/sytest)).
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You can see the progress of any CI jobs at the bottom of the Pull Request page, or by
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looking at the [Actions](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/actions) tab of the Dendrite
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repository.
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We generally won't accept a submission unless all of the CI jobs are passing. We
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do understand though that sometimes the tests get things wrong — if that's the case,
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please also raise a pull request to fix the relevant tests!
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### Running CI tests locally
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To save waiting for CI to finish after every commit, it is ideal to run the
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checks locally before pushing, fixing errors first. This also saves other people
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time as only so many PRs can be tested at a given time.
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To execute what CI tests, first run `./build/scripts/build-test-lint.sh`; this
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script will build the code, lint it, and run `go test ./...` with race condition
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checking enabled. If something needs to be changed, fix it and then run the
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script again until it no longer complains. Be warned that the linting can take a
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significant amount of CPU and RAM.
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Once the code builds, run [Sytest](https://github.com/matrix-org/sytest)
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according to the guide in
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[docs/development/sytest.md](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/blob/main/docs/development/sytest.md#using-a-sytest-docker-image)
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so you can see whether something is being broken and whether there are newly
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passing tests.
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If these two steps report no problems, the code should be able to pass the CI
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tests.
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## Picking things to do
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If you're new then feel free to pick up an issue labelled [good first
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issue](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/labels/good%20first%20issue).
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These should be well-contained, small pieces of work that can be picked up to
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help you get familiar with the code base.
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Once you're comfortable with hacking on Dendrite there are issues labelled as
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[help wanted](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/labels/help-wanted),
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these are often slightly larger or more complicated pieces of work but are
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hopefully nonetheless fairly well-contained.
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We ask people who are familiar with Dendrite to leave the [good first
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issue](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/labels/good%20first%20issue)
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issues so that there is always a way for new people to come and get involved.
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## Getting help
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For questions related to developing on Dendrite we have a dedicated room on
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Matrix [#dendrite-dev:matrix.org](https://matrix.to/#/#dendrite-dev:matrix.org)
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where we're happy to help.
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For more general questions please use [#dendrite:matrix.org](https://matrix.to/#/#dendrite:matrix.org).
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